What Do You Know? (1)

(Inventor)
(Synopsis: Extra details per scholarly paper by Duckworth & Hill, Journal of Applied Statistics, 1985 January, pages 59-69.)
 
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== Host ==
== Host ==
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Franklin Engelmann
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[[Franklin Engelmann]]
== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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BBC Light Programme, 1953-67
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Pilot as "Do You Like It?", BBC Light Programme, 15 May 1953
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BBC Light Programme, 2 August 1953 to 16 July 1967
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BBC Television (one-off simulcast), 25 June 1955
</div>
</div>
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== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
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The forerunner of [[Brain of Britain]]. There was a memory test interlude called ''Hear Hear'' too.
+
The forerunner of [[Brain of Britain]].
-
Transferred to television as [[Ask Me Another]].
+
Originally there were several different parts to the show, including ''Beat the Experts'' in which people famous in a particular field listened to a short play and were asked to point out the two deliberate mistakes. There was a memory test interlude called ''Hear Hear'' too.
 +
 
 +
The most popular part, which soon took over nearly the whole show, was called ''Ask Me Another'' and originally involved two celebrities (including the likes of Joyce Grenfell and [[Anona Winn]]) and one member of the public. Contestants scored one point for their first correct answer, then could go and say "ask me another" - a second question for two points, a third for three, and so on. But if the contender got their question wrong, they scored nothing from their turn, and the other players could try to answer for two bonus marks.
 +
 
 +
By 1956, the celebrity contestants had been dropped and it became purely a quiz for members of the public, competing for the title "Brain of Britain", while "Beat the Experts" was replaced by "Beat the Brains", in which listeners could send in questions to try to stump the panel. At some point in the early 1960s, the scoring system became the more familiar one point per correct answer and a bonus for five in a row.
 +
 
 +
In 1968 [[Brain of Britain]] became the title of both the main quiz and the whole programme.
 +
 
 +
A version of the original quiz also transferred to television as [[Ask Me Another]].
== Inventor ==
== Inventor ==
-
John P. Wynn
+
[[John P. Wynn]]
== Theme music ==
== Theme music ==
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Closing theme: ''Flying Squad'' by R. Hanmer
Closing theme: ''Flying Squad'' by R. Hanmer
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== Trivia ==
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The pilot was one of a short series of pilots from the same team. ''Very'' short, in fact - it comprised two programmes, the other being the much less successful [[Radio Flitch]].
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== Pictures ==
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<div class="image">[[File:Wynn clark engelmann cake.jpg|400px]]''Creator John P. Wynn, producer Joan Clark and host Franklin Engelmann celebrate the 200th episode in 1960.''</div>
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
[[Category:Memory]]
[[Category:Memory]]

Current revision as of 19:14, 7 February 2024

Contents

Host

Franklin Engelmann

Broadcast

Pilot as "Do You Like It?", BBC Light Programme, 15 May 1953

BBC Light Programme, 2 August 1953 to 16 July 1967

BBC Television (one-off simulcast), 25 June 1955

Synopsis

The forerunner of Brain of Britain.

Originally there were several different parts to the show, including Beat the Experts in which people famous in a particular field listened to a short play and were asked to point out the two deliberate mistakes. There was a memory test interlude called Hear Hear too.

The most popular part, which soon took over nearly the whole show, was called Ask Me Another and originally involved two celebrities (including the likes of Joyce Grenfell and Anona Winn) and one member of the public. Contestants scored one point for their first correct answer, then could go and say "ask me another" - a second question for two points, a third for three, and so on. But if the contender got their question wrong, they scored nothing from their turn, and the other players could try to answer for two bonus marks.

By 1956, the celebrity contestants had been dropped and it became purely a quiz for members of the public, competing for the title "Brain of Britain", while "Beat the Experts" was replaced by "Beat the Brains", in which listeners could send in questions to try to stump the panel. At some point in the early 1960s, the scoring system became the more familiar one point per correct answer and a bonus for five in a row.

In 1968 Brain of Britain became the title of both the main quiz and the whole programme.

A version of the original quiz also transferred to television as Ask Me Another.

Inventor

John P. Wynn

Theme music

Opening theme: Fanfare 1 and 2 EMI EP 35

Closing theme: Flying Squad by R. Hanmer

Trivia

The pilot was one of a short series of pilots from the same team. Very short, in fact - it comprised two programmes, the other being the much less successful Radio Flitch.

Pictures

Creator John P. Wynn, producer Joan Clark and host Franklin Engelmann celebrate the 200th episode in 1960.

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